THE AG : UUOII TOIJNG, EDlj'fe & PROPRIETOR. PA,, WEDNESDAY MORNIfTO, NOV. 13.1861, \i ■ j tSt*' Wo publish in an article headed “Slavery and ( flie War,” the viowslof a correspondent on the question now be* - fore the American peo' /iand we aak for that article the earneat conei:!|ration and attention ''of oar readers. We (ban once befcn reminded that it is oaf fluty as a journalist jto give expression to views%ttered daily around us by all classes of our.icitiaens. Incoaundn with many others we delayed that doty ' not because we sbrunkVfra|i it, hot because we did not wish to create at Ijj ©vision of sentiment amongour people wbio manner, directly of indirectly f. iti%e lukewarmness in helping to pat down hellion. Oar fears on this head were nq£ wcl| founded. for we Slid that the very men in bigr midst who were the most pro-slavery in |i|eir political views erenow in favor of tbe',stl|#lition,of slavery,'if this course shall be deeinSi necessary for the perpetuity of the Union, \> |Fe sincerely believe that not e .dozen men'ipaiia county can be found who would not glad* ate slavery abol ished if the Union could,.be preserved by this course. The question which then forces itself upon us—upon the miod'pf every patriot who loves bis country and tht. |reservation of her liberties—is this; Is ijrj&holitionof slavery necessary for the of the Union? This is a question uppn:3®iich every citizen , will soon be compelled -Ip Sake sides;’ it is a question, which, in sonh, jsSape suggests itself ; to the intelligent citizen every day ; ft ,is a question upon which thftrg are, and from its nature there must be ro'aiiy conflicting opin ions ; it is a question than fthicb none greater litis ever engrosssed the qit|ntion of a free peo ple, because its solatiop }fi|i)lves, in our opin. iop, the success or defeat'® the experiment of frice government nmeng :t3|free people. It is hardly necessary for us that we heartily endorse, and are ready to tbp best of otir ability to defend each and every;position assumed by the writer ofthat article, invite discussion upon the subject, and ns readily g : ve place in our columns to inff .writer who' shall . earnestly and manfully controvert the opinions held by this paper, as to 't®o«e who bold our views, .||| - ■- OUB FO^tjEa. The Harrisburg Tdegrcplr gives from-official sources the,number of Wpls which Pennsyl vania has had and now hHi te the field. From its tables we compileiitlle following facts and figures. - Under the Irfi requsition Penn sylvania 'furnished twefc regiments of three months men numbe'dpg 20,175.. Shoal- (0 furnished four regimeiitjcalled for by the general Government direct!?, for three years,, amountinginthe aggreg.lt| to 5,594. They vent previous to the- expiration of the three month's-term and ar6‘Btillir|the field. We also I sent fifteen regiments' of hW Reserve number-1 ing 15,643. Including tbi ijOur regiments and Reserves we have now in»dB service fifty-seven regiments numbering lf to these we add Pennsylvanians enlij-iyiS in Western Vir ginia, tbrf District of Colombia, the Maryland brigade'andPhiladelphiAfcft 1 other States, esti mated at 5,400, we have an aggregate act ually in service of 69,980 n|n. In addition to these wi) now preparing fur the service, twenty, reglnlents and six com panies of infantry, cavalry agd artillery amount ing to 81,090. Of tbeso 12,837 are now in camp, which added to the ;69,980 makes 82,- 817 ready to march, ‘"h's remaining 18,253 are expected to 1)0./ ready ,1| six weeks which will giro Pennsylvania the |nug little army of 101,070 men well equipped fnd ready to defend the honor of the stars and swipes. This is' 000 over opr quota of 75,00§ called for in the President’s' Proclamation', asd speaks well ws think for th» " ;h« old Key stone State American Independei In a apet Secretary Ci 1.500 more although ti inhabitants The great - the South ern Expedition -will carry id| to nil hearts. A most important step ieo taken toward the crushing of the KebeUiohj%ad the war is fairly carried into the enemy's® ujgtry by taking of Beaufort, concerning wbiithlethere can hardly be any doubt. The immprate effect of this success is seen on the Pofiimao, whence the Rebels are going in haste So South Carolina und Georgia. is- i. The ferry-boat Commod ir| Perry, which was forced away from the by the gale, re turned to Fortress Monroe 63. Saturday, . She floundered up and down th 3 fpast for some days seeing, howerer no j signing wrecks, and be lieving that the fleet eucocidpd in keeping well together. The Young River reports at Fort ress Monroe that the Governor, with 400 'mat rines on was in triable, but that the Sabine came to the rescue, t|jl took her in tow. On Thursday, the; Cnite^Spates gunboat Res cue went up the Rappahat h|ck as far as tip ban mi Greek, off the mout ® which she cap tured and burned a rebel. iifooner. . She fired on by a battery from' hf shore. The fire was returned, and the enf inyr shelled out. The Rescue.then threw shells it every 'spot where there were signs of an enei m with marked ef fect, and it was.boped tbs% j& Rebels would be effectually damaged, i f ' We are still without frill ; I tl|e rebel* suffered much more severely than we. , 0:ii“ lose is sct dowrt at 300. Our troops fought oil the way almost i|ito Colunijius, enteringthe _ ci nip of the enemy, spiking two guns aud bring i irg away two others, and 200 prisoners. It is j r< ported, though not on tho most trustworthy \ Biithi rity, that Gen. ogi)»i«has mot Jeff. Thomp tc n, killing 300 and losing 50. The main Ixidy ofjPrice's army 5s reported to have been forty-file miles sooth of Spring fie Id, Met., on the 6tH fast. {' the strength of his fo: at>o tojbe 25,000. ‘ Price’s posl tidb is saidto be a g|iod one on Crane Creek.— Sillock is stated io be at Fat Creek with or 8,000 men. I T m C. Fremont fe removed from the com. of the Depmjtment of the West. The or|er of the President' reached him at Spring field on the 2d inst., the very moment when his furcs was preparing to meet the advancing enemy. The intelligence spread like wildfire through the camps, and created indescribable indignation and excitement. Great numbers of ’officers signified their intention to resign at once, and many companies laid, down their -arms, declaring that they would fight under no Gen. Fremont. Gen. Fremont spent much of the -time in expostulating with the officers and men, urging them, by their pntri otism and their personal regard for him, not to abandon taeir poets. lie also issued the fol lowing farewell order to the troops ; He adop aiitehs Western Department, > Sentxo field, Mo., Nov. 2, 1861. j Soldiers of the Mississippi Army. Agreea bly to orders received this day, I take leave of youl Although our army has been of sudden growth, we have grown up together, and I have become fnufiliar with the hraro and generous spirits which you bring to the defence of your ‘country, and which makes me anticipate fur you a brilliant career. Continue as you have begun, and give to my successor the same cor dial and enthusiastic support with which yon have encouraged me. Emulate the splendid example, which you have al:early before you, and let me remain as 1 am. proud of the noble army which I have thus far labored to bring together. Soldiers, I regret to leave you. Most sin-‘ cerely I thank you for the regard and confi dence you have invariably shown me. I deeply regret that I shall not have the honor to lead you to the victory which- you are just about to win ;--hut I shall claim the right to share with you in the joy of every triumph, and trust al ways to be personally remembered to my com panions in arms. John C. Fremont, Major-General. The feeling ran high among the soldiers du ring the night after the news was received; and there were numerous the camps. The various bands serenaded the General, and wherever he appeared he was greeted with cheers. Although, after notifying Gen. Hun ter, as bis order directed, he had no lunger any command over the troops, be spent several hours in makihg a personal examination of the grounds about the city to be prepared for a bat tle, and, in accordance with a written request from all the Brigadier-Generals here, be ra the night to lend the army in All the troops slept on their iffieers remained up all night, •jis hourly expected. New york f ij'lvimift had New York illion more PKOM THE TIOGA BOYS, Corrospoti'lcnctf of the Agitator. CaUP PfERPONT, Va., Not. 4, 1861 FrieN'd Agitator. —During the (fait week but little of importance has transpired’hi this sec tion of the country. All has been ns quiet as though peace reigned throughout the land.— There has been no motre in this division, and there are no signs of any. The weather, until Friday, has been 'fine and pleasant. Everything looked lovely and gay —marching armies covered the hills by day, and thousands of camp fires illuminated the valleys by night. • The review which, took place on Tuesday, was a splendid thing. The morning came, and a- lovely one it was. Nut a cloud was to be seen, the air was dear and filled with martial music. All were busy-making preparations for the du ties of tho day. About 10 o’clock, the Stars and Stripes were stationed, and regiment aflfr regiment marched to their appointed post. At Tl o’clock, the field presented a magnificent sight. It wus one muring mass of soldiers, and looked like a gleaming forest of steel.— There can nothing be mors grand than a large and well dressed army, dra.tvn up in battle ar ray. -There was a large number of spectators present. Silks and ribbons fluttered in the breeze, while Senators and Congressmen looked on with interest—trees were filled, barns and house-tops were covered. About half past eleven, the firing of cannons informed us that the hour had arrived, and that the grand army began to move. In front was the artillery, nest the cavalry, and then came the Buck-tails with the other reimunt.H following in the rear. Al though, neither McClellan, Scott nor Lincoln were present, which was a disappointment to all, yet Gens. M< Call, Meade, Reynolds and McCalmont, were all on the ground, and deci ded our regiment to be the best in the review. Our regular monthly inspection took place last Thursday,. I understand that Capt. Carl has tho best Company in the Cth regiment. Thatspeuks well for ‘'Old Tioga.” No company was singled out in ours. Last Friday night it began to ruin—rained all night, all day Saturday, and a part of Sat urday night. This was a hard one; the rain fell in torrents, and tho wind blew a perfect hurricane; every few moments sweeping one of our little dwellings, from their foundation. 1 find it is one of the characteristics of this sec tion uf the country, that whenever it rains the wind blows a perfect gale. It seems too bud that an army like this should be quiet, such weather ns we have been fur tho past ten days, but presume it is all fur tho best, for McClellan is nt the helm. The resignation of Gen. Scott, and the promotion of Maj. Gen. McClellan, are among the chief topics of the camp; while all regret that a hero who Ims fought the battles of his country fur over half a century, should retire from active service in a time when the nation is rooked by internal commotion, they nil ipjuicelhat in McClellan they behold a man -whose young and active mind is Capable of comprehending the magni tude of Ihu work before him, and whose eye can scon these broad battle-field*, and one who will soon heal up the wounds of our bleeding country. AH »'?; how ask, is for "green ep-ed J THE TIOGA C 0 ATO K. jealousy" lo stand blinded, or rest upon other ( the Sooth, yetthua far the war has been man objects than Fremont; until these battles are aged by the government ns if no such;, sents over, and for our young hero to lead the van of j ment existed ns the governing animus of the war. the mighty army of the Potomac over the em- ' Every thing seems to have been done on the battlements of war which oppose us, into the I supposition that the South has been misled by cotton states, and carry this rebellion where it conspirators, has acted on a misconception, and actually belongs, and we'll ask for no warmer wfft‘come back and opologissae soon as it is barracks to shield u» from the winter’s storm disabused. The obviejus theory at the bottom than-the tents in which we now live, but, will of the federal campaign of 1861, is, that if the gladly follow that noble eon of our own state government maintainsl itself,, defends its capital, onward to a warmer clime. Col. Crocket. 1 shows Christian magnanimity and forbearance ' 1 in all its armies, and above all takes care that the “institution" of slavery shall receive os lit tle damage as possible from its. military opera tions, the Southern people will discard their rebel leaders, .and return to their loyalty, as doubtless they would Ibnt for the hatred whicii fills their hearts. j. Either what has been said about the spirit and temper of the southern people is untrue, either their scolding, raving, lynching and rush ing m mass to arms, tjefore they were wronged in the least, means nothing, or else the war has been managed thus far, on our part, unwisely. Nearly every has struck has been where the enemy'Was strongest! Not one has been ! truck; with its approbation, where he is weakest. [This could out supreme fully only on the supposition that the people ,of the South are not acting from animos ity, but from misapprehension—from which they will soon recover, if wo accept cojolly a few hard knocks, and give none, to do seri ous damage ! SLA VEST AND THE WAR. : Never was a country, loved as this country has been, by all those who have shared the ben efits wherein it bos exceeded all others. Whence then the domestic war, sudden, unexpected, which has convulsed it like au earthquake ! Why, when the forces of the loyal are so im mensely superior to those of the disloyal, does the war continue, and threaten to continue folr yeais? Is there uo way of bringing it to p speedy and desirable end ? These are ques tions that crowd out almost all othen in the breast of all. Are wo any mure to have the country of which we bare been so proud, or has the vision faded and gone with yesternight’s dreams ? Though the great rebellion is guided by a few prominent leaders, it by no means grew out of the ambition of these men. That ambition hikes advantage of a popular hatred which has grown out of a certain state of facts. It # is proverbial that u hom one injures he hales.— i Whether or not the proverb tells the exact truth, of human nature, this certainly is true. If apy' i one injures another, he hates all those who syral I pathise with his victim. It is probably true i that a'strung man may use a weak one with •great injustice, and not be conscious of hating him. On the contrary he may fondle him as a pet, and think lie loves him. But let somebody else nail attention to the injustice and take the ! part of the injurcd,"*and then the hatred will 1 blaze out. The strong man will he bitter as death towards the sympathiser with his pelvic! tiro, and bitter, just in proportion as be is con-} victed of his own injustice. This hatred will swallow up all saintship that does not rise tq | the point of repenting of the injustice. Of nil the odiums that ever inflamed and poisoned poor human nature, this is the most virulent. I In the infancy of the world—rout of which it has hardly emerged—strong men used weak. 7 ones ven? much as they would other animals. The wealthier made slaves of the poorer, evep of the same race. This fault of internal poll; ty, in spite of great advance iu arts, carried nations to their tombs. Of more modern civil-) ization, founded on law that dues not permit the strong to enslave the weak of the same race, the pest has been that men bare still been al lowed to use, as domestic animals, men of un civilized races. Supposing these uncivilized | men not to differ materially from animals, ei-- ; ther in character or capacity, it would not be easy t-o show (he injustice of treating them as such. But from first to last, however much they may differ fioro more civilized men, they differ infinitely more from the boasts of'the i field. Hcbee slavery is unjust at first, ant) grows more so as it grows older. The great quarrel between G.eal Britain and her American colonies, found all of the latter more or less involved with African slavery.—| Their first act, as the basis of their indepen! denco, was a solemn resolution to have done with it ns unjust and inconsistent with the free government which they desired. This popular, resolution was as strong in one part of the coun try ns another, or if anything, strongest where 1 the proportion af slaves was greatest. But where the slaves were fewest, private interest, must easily gave way to the public good, and hence the Northern part of the Union grew up free from slavery, while the Southern retained it, in,spite of ail resolutions, declarations, bills of right, do., which ought to have made an end of it. Nobody hates the Southern slave-hold ers, fur the mere fact of bolding slaves. Few fail to make all due allowances for the circum stances which have ted them into such injus tice. Many have admired them for that • easy generosity of disposition which naturally pro ceeds from wealth acquired without, personal labor. Never in the whole history of the world was anything criminal, treated with such for bearance and leniency, us Southern slavery and . its adjunct* have been treated by the people of the Norlh„Jhosc most opposed to it, having al ways, with almost ho exception, restricted them selves to the mildest- of moral suasion, and the very few who have resorted to opprobrious epi thets, have met with popular rebukes from their' neighbors, such ns slave-holders have seldom or never suffered. The South has been loved by the North as well as if slavery had not ex isted there. The North Fas always conceded to the slave holders more than their fair share of political power. Yet, ever since the revolu tion, every white man at the South, whether slave holder or non-slave holder, has been con scious of ihjustice.to the enslaved Africa-Amer ican—the black man, with usually more or less white blond in his veins. And for seventy-five years, at least, the white Southerner has been growing to hate more and more all the rest of mankind who express or imply any sympathy with this slave, or any sense of the injustice ho •offers. Here is the broad basis of popular ha tred on which the slave holders’ rebellion stands. Fur fiendish malignity, the annals of even religious wais cannot equal it. The am bitious leaders ere borne up by it as, neither superstition nor patriotism ever boro up any leaders. Of course, mere independence, qr be ing let alone, was not the object for which the war was commenced. It was revenge, con quest, the reconstruction of the government in such a way that sympathy with the slave could he punished, and the peculiar hatred gratified. Only those who have made it their special study, can have any thing approaching a true concep tion of the depth and extent of the hatred to wards the North, which has caused this war.— U is not founded on misconception or ignorance, but is most intense in those who bast know the North. It could not be diminished, but only be increased by hitting every body at the South know exactly the truth about the feeling to wards them at the North. They hate us the more the less we bate them. Our crime in their eyes, is, that wo are sorry for their injustice to . the black man. They can never forgive us fur showing by bur wealth that such injustice is not, on the whole, profitable. They would ex terminate from (be face ofj the earth every man who will nut either participate in their crime, or cordially approve of it. Such is the hatred which naturally and necessarily grow* out of ■lavery, surrounded by commaniteg where alj are free, and the freedom of all is n cherished . principle. It is iiks the electric wrath within a Leyden jar, intensified by the accumulation of the opposite electricity without. It would lie easy to bring almost innumera ble proofs of the existence! and overwhelming prevalence of sentitneni above described at For the Agitater. It is really a case ofl national life or death, and the people must jpdge according to! their own light and observation whether the terrible fact is as above stated.| If it is, then, let every man as ho loves honle, wife, children, liberty and country, cry aloud and demand of the gov ernment that it lose no|t one moment in dealing its deadliest blow at slavery, that it strike at the enemy’s weakest point, that it strike at once the soil from which grew and grows the hatred that produced this rebellion. The sin gle head and arm of tbo heroic Tighlman re captured a ship from the Jeff Davie pirates.— Wo may have a hundred thousand such Heroes with a word. Are wejashamed of that word, liberty ? , Is it objected that uttering the word “Liber ty” to the slaves of thd rebel states would vio late Our constitutional obligation to the border slave states still nominally loyal ? The slaves,, as slaves, are nothing Tut property —and the, constitution only on compensation .when the government takes private property for the public use. Had, the government paid mar ket price for all the sla(ves in Mtrylnnd, Ken tucky and Missouri, and set them free, before it fought the battle of Bull Run, the war would probably have been at an end before this, and the public debt could not hare been much grea ter. No man, not lost in misanthropy, can believe • that the great majority of the people of the free states arc not in love with free institutions and the honest of tho Declaration of Independence to all men. everywhere. But they never felt, any specials affection for black people and were never will ing to meddle with the affairs of other states. Therefore; so long as wo were at peace with the slave-bolding states, they would do and suffer j anything to maintain peace. Now, the case is} altered. They would sustain the government in any action towards the slave-curved states that would make them free. It is too true that there are scattered all over the North many men who, for various reasons, do not prize frec ; dom anywhere below their own level, butsym i patise heartily with the slave-holders in their contempt fur the rights of black people and their hatred for white ones who sympathise at all with the black. The slaveholders overrated the number and influence of these people very much, hut not their motive. Should the war continue on its plan of taking the greatest pains not to injure slavery, as if it were essen tial to tho salvation of the government, this class will become more and more arrogant, and will give mure and more comfort and aid to the i enemy. And it is not at ait unlikely to happen that tbo war msy thus be transferred to the soil of the free states. Then the revolution of '76 will have, to jie fought ever again, with even mure fearful odds against inal enable rights. .As the slave-holders are actually at war with the whole'human race, in favor of injustice to [the weak, shall we not take up the gnge and j fight for downright justice? The war must end one way or another. Justice must gain or lose by it. If slavery is to survive, justice imust lose. If it is not, better have it killed by ■ the shortest cut. Ho! unsophisticated young j American, to the rescue! Oceans of twaddle have been ladled over this nation about the idunger of getting black people loose I Would to God there were some danger in it! - They iare entirely too safe for their own interests and purs. It is time to hoot out of this continent the nonsense that it i& more dangerous to hire j than to drive, to cash than to lash anybody.— There is not one fact in this world’s history, so far as the writer knows, and ho once offered a handsome reward for one, to show that any harm ever came from liberating slaves. They can he kept from stealing as easily when free, as when slaves. If they will not work forfwa ges they starve to death, which, in the circum stances, is of course a Messing. This war, as has been truly said more than ten thousand times already, is not a war fur the emancipation .of black people, and never can be. _lt is a question of the life ami liberty of a nation, chiefly white. But we all deserve to be black and chattled slaves to bout, if we do not have the sense to use the emancipation of the black people as the means of saving the nation, it be ing a self-evidently infallible means of ending the rebellion in the shortest possible time. Docs anybody ask, after the slaves arei set free and the rebellion ctjushed, what then?— , Will slaveholders consent to a free sys tem ? Doubtless not, if left to themselves. The difficulty of emancipation is always the unfit ness of tbs'muster. Butr the expenses of the : ' war must be, paid, and the lands of the rebels must do it. .Our armies tjrill settle them. They ' are well drilled in the arts of peace, if not of , War. They know how tojwork themselves, and how to make others work justly and happily. ' Capital will.flow where they yoke to the plough ( and kindle the furge fire, j They .must and will plant, water and cherish the right sort of civil- i ization on the soil their courage has delivered from the corse. Human nature is everywhere 1 the same. The cause of hatred being retqoved the hatred will cease, and the very qian who struck at the helpyed flag ip behalf uf a pitiful ; tyrrany, will Mess and venerate the conqueror* i who struck tinder it in the name of eternal • justice, ; Onto. —Todd has 50,000 majority over Jewit, the regular Democratic candidate, Todd was a Douglas man last fall, but thinks that the “ Administration of Abraham Lincoln is equal to that of Andrew Jackson," Llet of Juror* for December Term. 0 (HUND jobow. Sullivan—Daniel Bradford, James A. Fel lowi, Uriah D. Welch. Lawrence—Bradley Baker, Dyer Power. . Jackson—o. D, Bly. iWellsboro—G. S. Cook, John B. Shakspeare. Morris—James Duffcy, Henry Crawford. Lib erty-Henry Pick. Delator—Wm. Francis, John Pierson.. Clymer—Donl. Holmes. Brook field—Stephen Lane. Chatham —R._ Morse. Midfllehury—Philander Niles, Jason|-Prnts man, Solomon Westbrook. Gaines—Jacob L. Ogden. Farmington—Joseph Peters. Bloss— Francis Welch,- Tioga Boro—Chas. J. Wheel er. Richmond —Andrew J. Watkins; ■ ! ’ THiVMWE JURORS, Charleston—Nelson Austin, B. Demanx, Lo renzo Mitchell. Wellsboro —Tho*. B. Bryden. Gaines —Conrad' Rennam. Westfield—A. C. Bancroft, C. Phillips. Deimar—Chas. Cope stick. S. Wilcox. Chatham—Orange Connelly, Lowel Chapel, John Spaulding, Robert Potter, Charles H. Vundusen. Brookfield—J. R. Coffin, George W. Davis, Wm. R. Seeley, Noah B. Scllock, C. G. Seeley, Shippen—Wm. Dim mict. Alpheus E. Dann, Jas. Howard. Bloss —James Davidson. Sullivan—Daniel R. Da vid, Calvin-Reynolds, Jefferson Welch. Deer field—C. H. Goldsmith. Clymer—L. Hancock. Lawrence—Dyer Inseho, S. Rockwell, Elias Snell. Nelson—Artemas Losey, Lyman Tyler. Richmond—Chas. Prentice. Covington Boro— S. S. Packard. Liberty--Michael Sheffer. SECOND WEEK, Liberty—John J, Albeck. Tioga Boro— Stephen C. Alfred. Bush. Jackson—Lyman Brewer, Clark Stilwell. Leer field—Arthur Bozzard. Charleston —S. W, Gat lin; "Wm. R. Jones, Andrew Tipple. Delmar— Alaion Brooks, E. P. Deane, Moses D. Field, Angus Griffin, Orson Webb, Silas May. Chat ham—Reuben Cloose, 11. F. Daniels, L. Hub hurt, Israel Simmons. Union—Anson Dunn. Farmington—Nathan Dudley, S. Stacy. Ship pen —Harry Ellis. Tioga—C. J. Humphrey, Ed. Mitchell. Richmond—James Hoard. Rut land—Wm. Hutchinson, P. V. Yanness. Law rence—Robt Inscbo. *Middlebury—G. D. Kee ney, T. J. Mafin, E. Potter* Elk-—John May nard. Sullivan—AY. AY. Welch. SHERIFF’S SAFES. BY virtue of sundry writs of Fi. Fa., Lev. Fa., and Vend. Ex., issued out of the Common Pleas of Tioga county, Pa., and to me directed, I will expose to public sale in the Court House in Wellsboro, on MONDAY, the 2d day of December, A. D. 1361, at one o’clock in the afternoun, the following described property, to wit; A lot of land in Middlcbory township, bounded .north and cast bv Philander Niles, south by Webster, and west by Plaak road—containing about $ an acre, all improved, a frame bouse, frame barn, out build ings and fruit trees thereon. To be sold as the prop erly of George W. Lloyd. ALSO—A lot of land in Union township, bounded north by John Irwin, east by read, south by John Ir '"in, and west by widow Beers—containing half an acre of improved land, with a frame house, frame grocery, and some fruit trocs thereon. To be sold as tie property of Junics W. Newell. ALSU—A lot of land iu Westfield township,bound ed north by Cuwancsque river, east by George Close, south, by David Close, and west by Win. Simmons— containing about twenty acres, about 15 acres im proved, frame house, frame barn, and fruit trees tboron. To be sold ns the property of A. L. tj. Leach. ALSO—A lot of land in CTiarie.-ton Towothip, boun ded a*>rlh by Bingham loud*, east by Heury Smith, sou}h by Wood, ond west by David Owen—containing about fifty acres, about fifteen acres improved, and fruit trees thereon. To be sold as the property of Ho ratio Owen. ALSO—Two hundred and twelve acres of land in Morris township, bounded on the north by Wm. Bacbe and Job Wilcox, on the east by J. N. Bacho, on the south by D. C. Evens, and on the west by Israel Mor ris—being the south-west part of warrant No. 1533, with about forty acres improved; one frame bouse, one log bouse, log bam, end apple orchard thereon. To be sold as tbo property of Henry Brill, Lewis Brill, Philip Brill* and Peter Brill. ALSO—A lot of land in Charleston township, boun ded north ond east by Oliver Elliott, South by State Hoad, and west by Meeting House lot—containing about tbreoiforths of an acre, all improved, with good frame store bouse and dwelling house combined, and some fruit trees thereon. To be sold as the property of Abraham Johnson. ALSO—A lot of land in Liberty township, bounded north by M. Kritzinger, east by F. Liett, south by David Ostrum, and West by Samuel Kibble—contain ing about 55 acres, about 35acres improved, log house, log barn, out buildings and frntt trees thereon. To be sold as the property of Jojin M. Love. ALSO—A lot of land in Richmond township, boun ded north by John Job and Constant Bailey, east by C. Bailey aud Lucy Glsworth, south by Glsworth and Eri White, west by Eri White and H. Wuod—contain ing about 90 acres more or less, aboat 5 acres improved, frame bouse and fruit trees thereon. To be sold as the property of L. R. Love, and Hannah Love. „ ALSO—A lot of land in Shippen township, beginiog at impost, tbe north-eaet corner of N. Impson, thence by the warrant line, east 133$ perches to a birch, thence south 45 perches to a. post, the north-east corner of tJria Impson, thence by said Impson west 133 perches ‘to a post, thenee by N. Impson north forty-five and seven-tenths perches to tbe place of beginiog—cos- Uining thirty.seven and a half acres, with 15 acres improved, a log house, log stable, and fruit trees there on. To be sold ns the property of L. A. Jearls. ALSO—A lot of land in Mansfield, to wit: Begin ning nt a post tbe north west corner hereof hod the south east corner of land of J P Morris : thence along ( tbo east side of Academy Si/cef, south 12 decrees, east 359 feet to a poM : thence along land of J S Hoard and others north 78 degrees, east 719 feet.to a post; ■thence along said Morris land north 21$ degrees east 364 feet; thence along said Morris land south 78 de grees to the place of beginning—containing between five and-six acres, be the same more or less, and de scribed in the plot of the village of Mansfield as the Seminary lot, all improved, with a brick Seminary building thereon, and other out buildings. To be sold as the property of the Mansfield Classical Seminary. ALSO —A lot of land iu Chatham township, bound ed on the north by lands of Seth B. Hackett- and highway, on the east by highway and Lovell Short, Un the south by Lovell Short ond Constant Avery, pn the west by Constant Avery afid Charles Fuller con taining 57 U-lOth acres, about 30 acres improved frame bouse, frame barn, ond a few fruit trees thereon! To be sold as the properly of David A Churchill and Gbenezer K Burley terre tenant. ALSO—A lot of land in Clymer township, bounded north and east by Bncditt Beach, south by Thomas Barber and west by Watson Trowbridge—eontaining eighty acre.*, about sixty acres improved, a frame house, two frame barns, cow shed and orchard and some other fuit trees thereon. To be sold as the prop erty of Rufus Scott. REGISTER’S NOTlCE.—Notice is hereby given that the following Administrators have filed tbeir accounts in the Register's Office of Tioga County, and that the same will be presented to tbq Orphan's Court of said county, on Monday tbe 9th day of De cember 1801, for confirmation and allowance. Account of John James A James H. Oulick Ad ministrators of the estate of John L. Evans, dec’d. 1 Account of P. C. Hoig A Andrew Bartle, Admin istrators of the estate of James A Wilson, dec'd. Account cf.F. W. Qitcbell, Administrator of the estate of Eli Gitcbell, dec'd. , Account of S. A. Kumsey A F. W, Gitcbell, Ad njlniitnUor* of the estate of Noah Ramsey, dec'd. . Account of Lafayette Gray, Administrator of’the estate of James Gray, dec’d. H. S. ARCHER KuV. mi. 2-- Register. , NOTICft-AU Persons Indebted to the late firm of Win. A. Roe t Co., cither by note or book ac count, will pleaee call upon the sqhjbrihers and pay up or they will he sued immediately, * H. W. WIUUMS. HENRY SHERWOOD. Nov, is, 1881, POST OFFICE NOTICE. X have received the newstyleof Pontage Stamp* at this office, and will exchange them for an equivalent amount of the old issue until Nov. 20th inst,, after nihich the old stamps will not he received in payment of postage on letters sent from this office. ; Morris, Nov, ]3,fSBl, If. CRAWFORD, P. M. ATM’S CATHARTIC Are yon >ick, feeble, and 00mph;,;,,., out of order, with yonr system der. 'lf, feelings uncomfortable ? There symtii ~t! ‘M prelude to aerioua illness. gome fit ?* creeping upon you, and should be arfM.jV 1 ' use of the right remedy." Take cleanse out the disordered humors— nortf and let the fluids move On unobatrnei j again, They stimulate the functions of it {“ vigorous activity, purify the system from ,l bt tiona which make disease, A cold sett ]“ in the boHs hare bad a long trial in my practicing I hold them in esteem as_one of the best apertabl have ever found. Their alcerfulte effect upoa &« Hrcr mades them an excellent remedy. when giiria small doses fur bilious dysentery and diarrhoea. Thilr sugar-coating makes them very acceptable and soars* nient for the use of women and ebilaren. 1 Dyspepsia, Imparity of the Blood. from Hoc J V ffime* Factor of Advent Church Butn Bn. Aver ; I have used your, Piile with iiEmr diuary success in my family and among those I.t* called to visit in distress. Xo regulatt the organist digestion and purify the blood, they are the very bed remedy I have ever known, and I can confidently recommend them to my friends. Yours. j. v. Him Warsaw, Wyoming Co., N, T., Oct. 21,18», Dear Sir : lam using your Cathartic Fills in af practice, and find them an excellent pprgttivs is cleanse the system and purify the fountains of tit blood. JGHN U. JIEACHAM, U. D. Costipalibn, Co»tivcne«», Supprw sioii, Rbeauiiiiism, Goal, IfcnraN Ss'a, Dropsy, Paralysis, Fils,ele, from Hr. J. I’. Vaujhll t Montreal Canadf,. Too much cannot be said of your Pills for.thseoi of Costiveness. If others of our fraternity hart found them as efficacious as X have, they should j*ii me in proclaiming it for the benefit of the.maltitod** who suffer from that complaint, which, although W enough in itself, is the progenitor of others that ir* worse. I beiere oostiveness to originate in lb# Hrir, but your 'Pills affect that organ and cure the ditesH* if rom Mrw. E. Stuart, Physician and Midwife, I find one or two large doses of your Pills» at the proper time, ore excellent promotives of dii natural secretion when wholly or partially snpprwwi and also Tory effectual to cleanse the stomach sadsx*. pel worms. They are so much the best pbyii* f * ;have that J recommend no other to my patitoti. From ?«r. l)r. Huxckct, nf the Mefhoditl Eyi>- Chnrtt Pulaski House, Sarannab, Ga., Jan. 6,185®* Honored Sir: X should be.ungraleful for the re* Hef yopr skill has brought me if I did not report of case to- you. A cold settled in my limbs and on excruciating neulnlglc pains, which coded m chronic rheumatism. Notwithstanding I had tho b«l of physicians, the disease grew worse and won*i until by the advice of your excellent sp lll * *. n Baltimore, Dr. Mackenzie, X- tried your Pills. Xb* l * effects were slow, but sure. By persevering hiiw* uao of them, I am now entirely well. Sebate Chamber, Baton Rouge, Lo., 5 Dec. 55. Dr. Aver : I have been entirely cured, by J° D J Pills, of Rheumatic Gout—a painful disease that hi -afflicted me for year?. VINCENT SLIDELL. Moat of the Pilla in market contain Mercuty which, although a valuable remedy in skillful fas*® l * is dangerous in a public pill, from the dreadful wb* sequences that frequently follow its inenutiou* ”**• Those contain no mercury or mineral substincs wnM* ever. Price t 25 cents per box, er 5 boxes for sl* Prepared by Dr. J. C, AYER & Co Lowell, 31*®* Sold by C. 4 J. L. Robinson, Wellsboro; H* Borden, Tioga; W, G. Miller and C. Parkburst- I***’’ renceville; A. 4J. Dearman, Knoxville; S. 'L lings, Gaines; J. 4J. G. ParkhurtUElklttoa; • K. Mitchell, MUchellville;. J. Redington, Mw® bury; Bennett 4 Randall, Middlebary CcdU«; * W. Nesbitt, Mansfield; S. S, Packard, G. R. Sheffer, Liberty i D. S. Magee, Blossburg; * 4 Witter, Maiosbnrg, and by Dealers everywhere Nov, 6,1861.-6 m. ' ... Tioga co. court proclamation-- Whereas, the Hon. Robert G. While,-Pre««” Judge for the.dth Judicial District of Penns,”’ ’ and E. T. Bentley and J. C. Whittaker, Esq. », ciale Judges in Tioga county, hare issued qm cept; bearing date the 14th day of Sept-. ' and to mo directed; Tor the bolding of Orphan s'* Court of Common Pleas, General Quarter S» and Oyer and Terminer, at Wellsboro, for the v of Tioga, on the first Monday of December, ( the 2d day), 1861, and to continue two weeks. Notice is therefore hereby given, to the Co Justices lof tho Peace, and Constables in and 1 county of Tioga, to appear in their own proper tong, Wh their records, inquisitions, examined remembrances, to do those things which of tee cas and in their behalf appertain to be done, a” witnesses and other persons-prosecuting tf oso tho Commonwealth against any person or p er *° ’ w required to be than and there attending, * D ? OOBe . depart at their peril. Jurors arc requested to be P tuai in their attendance at the appointed time, ( ably to police, ’ , r ngee, Given under my hand and seal we J Lord one sna^^